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"upbraid" Definitions
  1. upbraid somebody (for something/for doing something) to criticize somebody or speak angrily to them because you do not approve of something that they have said or done

46 Sentences With "upbraid"

How to use upbraid in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "upbraid" and check conjugation/comparative form for "upbraid". Mastering all the usages of "upbraid" from sentence examples published by news publications.

He can upbraid our allies or cozy up to former enemies.
"On many occasions when Fox would personally upbraid me," Shelton told Reuters.
One of my nephews emailed to upbraid me for not defending Prep.
It's another strata to upbraid the speaker of the House on the floor .
Clinton not be prosecuted over her email server, but had to publicly upbraid
On Wednesday, Judge Alsup continued to upbraid Uber's lawyers for not being more forthcoming with evidence.
Klages's response then, Lemke recalled, was to upbraid her and warn her against spreading false information.
Soon after, Trump took to Twitter to publicly upbraid the Senate Republican leader, painting McConnell as ineffective.
She telephoned two weeks ago to upbraid me for getting the wrong type of referral for an appointment.
He would publicly upbraid her for subpar performances, sometimes throwing objects or kicking a wall to underscore his disappointment.
Graham dramatically and emotionally took the floor in Kavanaugh's confirmation hearing to upbraid Democrats for, he said, trying to ruin the guy's life.
The Club For Growth has spent over $200,000 on advertisements, most of which upbraid politically vulnerable House Democrats for supporting the impeachment inquiry.
But Martin certainly had plenty of time to observe Long from afar, and how he would upbraid those working directly with him, sometimes vehemently.
The drills can also upbraid the surface or rock if scientists want to use the rover's instruments to have a closer look at the details.
My favorite Conway-ism was that certain members of Congress shouldn't upbraid Trump because they are guilty themselves of forcing French kisses on unwilling women.
It started when she seemed to sartorially upbraid Trump for his Billy Bush vulgarities by wearing a pussy-bow blouse to the St. Louis debate.
Plenty. Cover art: The senator stares straight ahead — hands on hips, the beginnings of a wry smile — as if preparing to upbraid an unruly banker.
And while political leaders upbraid the E.P.A. and state regulators for laggard responses to crises in Flint and elsewhere, they have themselves lagged in offering support.
It is so funny, so soft and joyous, that during intermission, I texted a friend who refused to come see it with me solely to upbraid her for her mistake.
In that case, having Pence upbraid the Communist giant might give Trump cover to argue that no administration has been tougher on China -- while spinning away criticism of a disappointing deal.
But he's also solidly built, and it's the compound of the bruiser and the cad, with a voice sufficiently rich to upbraid or to beguile, that makes Burke's Anthony so unignorable.
"In front of me, Emmanuel Macron protested his good faith, and his faithfulness," Mr. Hollande writes, describing a moment when he was forced to upbraid his protégé for having displayed his ambition.
Prime Minister Theresa May's spokeswoman appeared to upbraid Trump in response to comments the US President made at a rally mocking a journalist working for the Guardian who got body-slammed by a member of congress.
He is conservative enough to be out of step with most of the characters in the novel, several of whom upbraid him for his beliefs, but liberal enough to feel unmoored by the rise of Trumpism.
Related: Video: Anti-Trump Protest Turns Violent Outside San Jose Rally Sanders, who has also blasted Clinton over her support of the Iraq war, seized on the opportunity to upbraid both of his rivals on foreign policy.
By definition they have an overdeveloped appetite for approval that prompts them to feign sympathy, delve into parts of society where they would not otherwise venture and humour certain audiences when they ought to avoid or upbraid them.
Less than a week before Amazon officially announced it had chosen New York City and Crystal City, Virginia, to house its second and third headquarters, Amazon director of economic development Mike Grella took to Twitter to upbraid someone on Crystal City's end of the deal.
The event took a bizarre twist, however, as two men defending the airline interrupted the proceedings to upbraid the two employees, talking about one's breast size, and undercutting repeated assertions from Aeroflot that it had not discriminated by arguing that attractive flight staff were important for business.
In a Washington Post op-ed about the Carrier deal, the Vermont senator didn't just upbraid Trump for his fraud but also offered a genuine policy alternative:  If United Technologies or any other company wants to keep outsourcing decent-paying American jobs, those companies must pay an outsourcing tax equal to the amount of money they expect to save by moving factories to Mexico or other low-wage countries.
The poor girl had not spirit sufficient to upbraid her friend, nor did it suit her now to acerbate an enemy.
The spirit of manifestation will but upbraid you in the shame and horror of a sad eternity, if you have not the spirit of obsignation.
Jesus preaches peace, the apostles preach peace, the apostolic men preach peace, and they argue against, obsecrate, and upbraid those who sin, but do so with all patience and teaching.
After the withdrawal of the ambassadors, the Epiriote army advanced into Laconia followed the Eurotas River south and started to ravaging the territory of the Spartan perioeci. Pyrrhus' deceit prompted outrage in Sparta and the ambassadors were again dispatched to the Epiriote to upbraid him for his perfidy.
During World War I, Dillon served in the transport lines at Belton Park, Grantham, the Machine Gun Corps training depot. He was not a good soldier, and was often in trouble. However, Marie Lloyd would travel to Grantham to upbraid any officer who had punished her husband. These officers would often go missing when she arrived.
His date, a narcissistic bar owner, is clearly disgusted that the doctor does not match his much slimmer profile. A mistake in a botched procedure, that nearly costs a patient his life, makes Yossi's supervisor gently upbraid him for not taking a vacation. At work, there are rumors that the quiet and withdrawn Yossi might be gay. Nevertheless, he has attracted the interest of Nina, a nurse infatuated with him.
At the 1858 colonial election he was elected to the two-member seat of Parramatta. He was subsequently the first member elected to the seat at the 1859 election but at the 1860 election he gained second place behind a newcomer John Lackey. While still successful, Byrnes took offence at being placed second and used his declaration of poll speech to upbraid the voters. He resigned from the seat before parliament met.
He was prominent in Midlands club cricket for many years and played for The Forty Club, which takes cricket into schools, into his 60s. At Edgbaston Cricket Ground, he was for many years to 1988 the "stentorian- voiced" public address announcer: Wisden Cricketers' Almanack noted, in its obituary of him in 1994, that he "would upbraid small boys for the slightest mischief in an echoing basso profundo", and that "his successor is still sometimes called the Cluggie".
In the literary world, Charlotte Dacre has remained in virtual obscurity for nearly two centuries. However, her work was admired by some of the literary giants of her day and her novels influenced Percy Bysshe Shelley who thought highly of her style and creative skills. She is believed to be one of the numerous targets of Lord Byron's satirical poem English Bards and Scotch Reviewers, mentioned in the lines: :Far be't from me unkindly to upbraid :The lovely 's prose in masquerade, :Whose strains, the faithful echoes of her mind, :Leave wondering comprehension far behind.
In the morning Streeter and his deputies arrive to take over the case. Streeter attempts to upbraid Abel about the second murder, but Abel refutes his criticisms. As Streeter is talking, he mutters about Murphy's strange name. This prompts Abel to wonder how Kate knew the animal's name, as the dog had not previously been treated at the veterinary clinic. He looks at the photo that he found at the dead woman’s home, of the naked man and woman on the beach, and thinks the woman is Kate.
" Among the critics of these comments were Channel 4 economics editor Faisal Islam, who said, "I thought scientists were meant to upbraid journalists for use of spurious data points to 'prove' existing prejudgements," and columnist Tom Chivers in The Daily Telegraph. Dawkins has responded at length to the most common criticisms he has received in a post titled "Calm reflections after a storm in a teacup". Dawkins has criticised the term Islamophobia. In 2015, along with the National Secular Society, he expressed opposition to a proposal by then Labour Party leader Ed Miliband to make Islamophobia an "aggravated crime.
Among the works that have received multiple recordings are A Colour Symphony (6 recordings); the Cello Concerto (6); the Piano Concerto (6); Music for Strings (7); the Oboe Quintet (7); the Viola Sonata (The violin sonata was first recorded in 2010) (7); and Checkmate (complete ballet and ballet suite (9))."Sir Arthur Bliss, Recordings and CDs" , Cambridge University Library, accessed 22 March 2011 On receiving the Gold Medal of the Royal Philharmonic Society in 1963, Bliss said, "I don't claim to have done more than light a small taper at the shrine of music. I do not upbraid Fate for not having given me greater gifts. Endeavour has been the joy".
Esfandiar is again successful, and upon his return Goshtasb hedges once again and – aware of a prediction that foretells the death of Esfandiar at the hand of Rostam – sends him off on a mission in which Esfandiar is destined to die. In the Shahnameh, the nobles upbraid Goshtasb as a disgrace to the throne; his daughters denounce him as a heinous criminal; and his younger son Bashutan (Avestan Peshotanu) condemns him as a wanton destroyer of Iran. As in Zoroastrian tradition, in the Sistan cycle texts Goshtasp is succeeded by Esfandiar's son, Bahman (< MP Wahman). The identification of Bahman with 'Ardashir' (see above) reappears in the Sistan cycle texts as well.
According to the report, "The Prince's sallow face turned scarlet and his eyes seemed to start from their orbits," and he had one of his companions upbraid the fellow for impertinence."Albert Victor Hissed: Frenchmen Express Disapproval Of The English Prince", Chicago Tribune, 4 May 1890 Somerset's sister, Lady Waterford, denied that her brother knew anything about Albert Victor. She wrote, "I am sure the boy is as straight as a line ... Arthur does not the least know how or where the boy spends his time ... he believes the boy to be perfectly innocent."Blanche Beresford, Marchioness of Waterford to Reginald Brett, 2nd Viscount Esher, 31 December 1889, quoted in Aronson, p. 168 and Cook, pp. 196, 200.
Dona Beatriz Kimpa Vita, Kimpa Mvita or Tchimpa Vita (1684 - 2 July 1706), was a Kongo Empire prophet and leader of her own Christian movement, Antonianism, this movement taught that Jesus and other early Christian figures were from the Kongo Empire. The name "Dona" indicates that she was born into a family of high Kongolese nobility; she was later given the name "Beatriz" after the Catholic Saint. Her teaching grew out of the traditions of the Roman Catholic Church in Kongo, and caused her to upbraid the Catholic priests for not believing as she did. Dona Beatriz believed the teachings of St. Anthony and used this claim to attempt to restore the ideal of Kongo as a unified Christian Kingdom.
Typically, he was being too hard on himself (and perhaps also on those reviewers who had failed to upbraid him for his perceived mistake). It may be that to some extent Brooks subsequently 'lost his voice', or his muse, as a novelist and, apart from the four novellas collected in Doing the Voices (1986), never published a major work of fiction again. There may have been another reason for his never having completed another novel: the period generally known as 'the sixties' had altered the world to such an extent that his voice, forged in wartime Britain, suddenly seemed outdated. The American beat was in the ascendant; literature had to be hip, had to address the new consciousness and speak to it in its own tones.
Charles "Ebony" Horton was tried for and pleaded guilty to kidnapping, assault with intent to rape a child under 16, indecent assault and battery on a child under 14, assault and battery, and assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon. Horton, while dressed as a woman, used a ruse to lead an 11-year-old boy to an abandoned warehouse where he forced the boy to simulate sex acts after holding a screwdriver to the child's neck. During the sentencing phase of the trial, Suffolk County District Attorney David Deakin who had asked Lopez to give Horton an eight-to- ten-year jail sentence, tried to protest her decision to sentence Horton to house arrest and five years of probation. Judge Lopez, who was angered by the presence of members of the media, proceeded to upbraid the prosecutor as she suspected he had alerted the press.

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